> the fact that Oracle owns the trademark "JavaScript", acquired along with
Sun.

How did sun get it?

On Thu, Oct 4, 2012 at 9:07 PM, Rick Waldron <[email protected]> wrote:

>  So, is no one else nervous about the fact that Oracle owns the trademark
> "JavaScript", acquired along with Sun. If they develop a JavaScript
> implementation it gives them grounds to "defend the mark".
>
> -Rick
>
> On Thursday, October 4, 2012 at 11:52 PM, Jonathan Buchanan wrote:
>
> There's been an interesting thread I've been following throughout this (my
> first) JavaOne of "polyglot" - pretty much: "Java the language is way,
> waaay far from perfect: use whatever JVM language best suits the job/domain
> at hand." Obviously, there's been that "on the JVM" bent, but the message
> dynamic language guys have been selling is: "if you need middleware which
> already exists in a Java EE app server and there's a wrapper for <favourite
> dynamic language>, just *use* the <favourite dynamic language> wrapper."
> Other talks have gone further and pretty much said: "look: when you need to
> scale, just use whatever's best at the task at hand, doesn't matter what
> it's written in/runs on," at which many mental high-fives were given by
> myself and a a certain amount of confuzzled questions were asked.
>
> The JRuby guys are way ahead on this front: Charles Nutter has had a bunch
> of great talks here, and from listening to the Oracle & JVM guys it sounds
> like he's been a key driver as an initial user of the JVM-specific details
> (invokeDynamic). He and Tom Enebo (another JRuby guy) had a packed talk
> where they did a great job of sellling dynamic languages in general and for
> build/testing tools in particular as an entry point. Given that Oracle have
> people working on a more efficient JavaScript implementation than what's
> standard in Java-land, and that they're working on a Node API
> implementation (a talk today about implementation details such as
> https://github.com/szegedi/dynalink was a programmer geeking-out-fest, as
> someone who's been stuck in webapps-land for too long), I guess this just
> is a bit of a heads-up.
>
> (I should point out, FWIW, that I use (server-side) JavaScript and Python
> almost exclusively in my free time and Java/JVM/enterprisey stuff almost
> exclusively at work, so I'm currently a bit stoked (and drunk on free
> alcolhol, and overwhelmed by SF partially due to the former) about having
> attended days of talks which merge stuff I'm interested in personally and
> stuff I *have* to be interested in professionally)
>
> Thanks,
> Jonny.
>
> On 4 October 2012 19:05, Ben Noordhuis <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Oct 4, 2012 at 7:16 PM, Jonathan Buchanan
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I'm at JavaOne, for my sins, and I've been attending all the sessions
> > related to Oracle's new JavaScript implementation in Java, called
> Nashorn.
> >
> > What initially caught my eye was that they're also porting the Node.js
> APIs,
> > module system etc. in a project called Node.jar. Nashorn itself is going
> to
> > be open-source, but it sounds like it's hard to get a hold of Node.jar
> even
> > if you work for Oracle, and there are no plans to open-source Node.jar,
> but
> > it could be another deployment option in the future and another way to
> get
> > at multi-threading.
> >
> > These are what I can decipher from my scribbled notes:
> >
> >
> https://insin-notes.readthedocs.org/en/latest/JavaOne2012/meet_nashorn_bof.html
>
>    - >
>    
> https://insin-notes.readthedocs.org/en/latest/JavaOne2012/nashorn_node_jpa_persistence_bof.html
>
> >
> > They at pains to point out they hadn't looked at any other
> implementations
> > to keep the JavaScript engine "pure", but it sounds like the Node port is
> > trying to reuse as much of the Node JS libs as possible and Node's tests.
> >
> > Has the Node dev team been involved with or consulted about any of this
> > stuff?
>
> Very interesting, thanks for posting that. And no, we've not been
> consulted. :-)
>
>
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